Artificial Intelligence and Sentience


In this video I talk about the history of the artificial intelligence field, the human brain, the evolution of intelligence through natural selection, as well as my own ideas about the future of AI, and how to bring about sentient computers.

A.I. Artificial Intelligence – teddy parts


The cool parts with just teddy cuz frankly hes the only good part about the movie. my editing stills got a little better but not really vicepresidentialactionrangers.blogspot.com

ALICE Artificial Intelligence and Nicole


This video illustrates a form of Turing test where the computer tries to fool the human into thinking that the computer itself is human. Download free at www.massey.ac.nz (vista only) To get Nicole you must visit www.guile3d.com.br She is a modest sum and he has free characters too. Any MSAGENT character will work. I have merged the ALICE AI engine with Nicole (guile3d of Brazil). The ALICE chatterbox engine is available here alice.pandorabots.com and Nicole (the MS Agent) is available here: www.guile3d.com.br I am using speech recognition (SAPI 6.1) for data entry and speech recognition (SAPI 4) for speech synthesis. (AT & T speech engines and Microsoft speech recognition). The project here builds on early projects where Nicole is used to play music and video, switch houshold appliances, read the news etc. Now you can hold a conversation of sorts. It can at time be amusing…Imagine what will happen in 20 years time? Download entire program (free) for Vista at tur-www1.massey.ac.nz Dr Tom Moir School of Engineering and Advanced Technology (SEAT) Massey University at Auckland New Zealand

Artificial Intelligence Bots Speaking To Each other


I made a small java applications that interacts with two ‘charliebot’ bots and then let them speak with each other. The things they say are presented as text and speech. The speech synthesis is done using freetts. Fortune Cookie sentences are inserted randomly to make the conversation more interesting.

A.I. Part 7


Thanks for being patienced! Enjoy!

Singularity Institute for Artificial Intelligence


www.singinst.org “In the coming decades, humanity will likely create a powerful AI. The Singularity Institute for Artificial Intelligence exists to confront the implied challenge, both the opportunity and the risk.”

Self-Improving Artificial Intelligence


October 24, 2007 lecture by Steve Omohundro for the Stanford University Computer Systems Colloquium (EE 380). Steve presents fundamental principles that underlie the operation of “self-improving systems,” ie, computer software and hardware that improve themselves by learning from their own operations. EE 380 | Computer Systems Colloquium: www.stanford.edu Stanford Computer Systems Laboratory: csl.stanford.edu Stanford Center for Professional Development: scpd.stanford.edu Stanford University Channel on youtube: www.youtube.com

Infinite Mario AI – Long Level


This is my attempt at a Mario AI using a path-finding algorithm called A*. The bot won both Mario AI competitions this year! You can see the path it plans to go as a red line, which updates when it detects new obstacles at the right screen border. It uses only information visible on screen. At the “close call” situation: In this version of Mario, when you’re jumping while sliding on a wall, you jump backwards and upwards away from it. That’s what the AI did twice to get out of the hole. The source code is now available on my homepage! More info: Competition: julian.togelius.com My Project Page: www.doc.ic.ac.uk A star: en.wikipedia.org Enjoy :) *Update*: My Mario AI won the ICE-GIC conference competition this year! Yay!

Artificial Intelligence: Thinking Big – KQED QUEST


Though computers have gotten faster, smaller and more versatile, it’s still a big challenge to get them to demonstrate intelligent behaviors. Will machines like robots ever match — or perhaps even exceed — the capabilities of the human brain? QUEST meets a robot that in ten years time could take care of tasks around the house that most of us would rather not do.

Jeff Hawkins on Artificial Intelligence – Part 1/5


The founder of Palm, Jeff Hawkins, solves the mystery of Artificial Intelligence and presents his theory at the RSA Conference 2008. He gives a brief tutorial on the neocortex and then explains how the brain stores memory and then describes how to use that knowledge to create artificial intelligence. This lecture is insightful and his theory will revolutionize computer science.